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Europe and America - Two Speeches on Imperialism by Leon Trotsky
$12.00 NZD
Category: Social Science | Reading Level: new
Writing in the mid-1920s, Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky explains the emergence of the United States as imperialism's dominant economic and financial power following World War I. He describes the sharpening conflicts between Washington and its European rivals and highlights the revolutionary openings for ...Show more
Leon Trotsky on France by Leon Trotsky; David Salner (Editor)
$14.00 NZD
Category: Social Science | Reading Level: new
An assessment of the social and economic crisis that shook France in the mid-1930s in the aftermath of Hitler's rise to power in Germany, and a program to unite the working class and exploited peasantry to confront it.
The Crisis of the French Section (1935-36) by Leon Trotsky; Pierre Frank (Contribution by); Erwin Wolf (Contribution by)
$15.00 NZD
Category: Social Science | Reading Level: new
Articles and letters to young militants expelled in 1935 from the rightward-moving Socialist Party of France, explaining the kind of party that must be built to lead a socialist revolution.Notes, glossary, selected bibliography, index.
The First Five Years of the Communist International, Volume 2 by Leon Trotsky
$15.00 NZD
Category: Social Science | Series: First Five Years of the Communist International Ser. | Reading Level: new
During the early years of the Communist International, from 1919 through 1922, its course was recorded in reports and resolutions shaped above all by its central founding leader, V.I. Lenin, as well as by Leon Trotsky. This two-volume collection contains speeches and writings by Trotsky on the struggle ...Show more
The Third International after Lenin by Leon Trotsky; James P. Cannon (Contribution by); Michael Taber (Preface by)
$15.00 NZD
Category: Social Science | Reading Level: new
Written in 1928, this is Trotsky’s alternative to Stalin’s course toward gutting the revolutionary program of the Communist International. “An international communist program is in no case the sum total of national programs or an amalgam of their common features,” Trotsky wrote. “In the present epoch, t ...Show more
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